How did the Constitution Guard Against Tyranny? Introduction The constitution guards against Tyranny (or prevents dictatorship) by four ideals, Federalism, Separation of Powers, Checks and Balances System and Big states versus small states. It was hard to achieve, but successful near the end. Back in 1787, fifty-five delegates representing twelve of the thirteen states met in Philadelphia to fix the national government. The problem was that the existing government, under the Articles of Confederation wasn't doing the job. It was too weak. There overall goal was to create a strong-central government without letting anyone gaining much power. Federalism Federalism is a compound republic, meaning it is made up of two governments. It is between two distinct governments which are subdivided into separate departments. One is the central government for the political authority that governs an entire nation. The other is the state government which is for the people who live in that specific state. These two governments consequently gave double security for the rights of the people. “The different governments will each control each other, at the same time, control itself.” …show more content…
Each of these branches had a primary job. The Legislative branch made the laws, and the Executive branch enforced the laws. While the Judicial branch interpreted these laws. James Madison didn't want all these branches to interfere with each others business. For example, If a person elected as the House of Representatives to serve at the same time as Vice President they would be making and enforcing laws at the same time. This causes too much power which would end up in tyranny. “Liberty requires that the three great departments of power should be separate and distinct.” (Madison, Federalist Paper #47) By Liberty, the Separation of Powers guarded against